Despite the Swiss Confederation’s economic expansion, its political institutions were poorly prepared to meet the forces set loose by the French Revolution: the 13 cantons had no central government; each had its own army; religious antagonisms persisted; the rural cantons were suspicious of the towns; the small cantons were jealous of the larger ones; the call for reforming the oligarchic and often corrupt hierarchies had been issued in several urban revolts during the 18th century, most frequently and intensely in Geneva, but was always violently repressed; and the more moderate propositions of the enlightened statesmen in the Helvetische Gesellschaft (Helvetic Society), a supraconfessional patriotic organization founded in 1761, met with similar refusal.

Although both pro- and anti-French feelings existed, Switzerland attempted to remain neutral during the French revolutionary wars. The country’s strategic position on the main Paris-Milan route via the Simplon Pass was vital for France, however, as was control of the Great Saint Bernard Pass. Thus, after Napoleon’s armies had conquered northern Italy, France invaded Switzerland and occupied Bern on March 5, 1798. Earlier the subjects in the Vaud and elsewhere had started to revolt against their urban lords, which thus revealed the impossibility of uniting the whole country against an often welcomed invader. Napoleon’s occupation effectively ended the ancient confederation of the 13 cantons and their allies.

Under French protection the Helvetic Republic, which lasted from 1798 to 1803, was established. For the first time in Swiss history, a constitution granted sovereignty to the people and provided individual rights and equality before the law; the subjects were liberated, and the Bernese and joint dependencies became cantons of their own. Although some former allies such as Sankt Gallen and the Graubünden joined the republic as full members, other cantons—Geneva, Neuchâtel, Valais, and the bishopric of Basel—were temporarily annexed by France. The unitary constitution, largely written by Peter Ochs, Basel’s chief master of the guilds, was modeled in Paris after the French constitution of 1795 and neglected the Swiss tradition of cantonal sovereignty. Opposition to the new state was strongest in central Switzerland, where Nidwalden’s revolt ended with a massacre. But even the supporters of the Helvetic Republic soon split into factions and fought each other in several coups d’état. Furthermore, the French treated Switzerland as a vassal state, plundering it and making it a battlefield in their conflicts with Austrian and Russian enemies. By the time French troops withdrew in 1803, Switzerland was plagued by civil war and anarchy, which prompted Napoleon to intervene with the Mediation Act; this stabilized the country without sacrificing the recently acquired individual rights. The 13 cantons were reestablished as near-sovereign states, and 6 new ones were created with full rights: Sankt Gallen, the Graubünden, Aargau, Thurgau, Ticino, and Vaud. During the rest of the Napoleonic Wars, the Swiss were bound to France by a defensive alliance, and several thousand Swiss soldiers died during Napoleon’s Russian campaign. Industry, especially textiles, suffered heavily from the continental blockade. In 1815, after Napoleon’s fall at the Battle of Waterloo, the Congress of Vienna handed over the Valtellina from Graubünden to Austria, but it added the three ancient allies of Valais, Neuchâtel, and Geneva to the Swiss Confederation, bringing its total to 22 cantons. Thus, the hopes of Bern and the Catholic cantons to reestablish the former dependencies were not realized, though Bern received Jura, the ancient bishopric of Basel, as compensation. Through the Second Treaty of Paris (1815), the European powers recognized and guaranteed the perpetual neutrality of the confederation.

Economic growth

Despite a major famine in 1816–17, a period of dramatic economic growth began after the Napoleonic Wars. There was a general improvement in agriculture, and tourism, especially from England, began to develop. But the industrial sector of the economy made the most significant gains, while still keeping its peasant character. The exclusion of the English from European markets by the wartime continental blockade, while initially detrimental to the textile industry, spurred the Swiss to modernize and to adopt mechanical spinning.

The first mechanized spinning mill was set up in Sankt Gallen in 1801, and the first large-scale plant was established a year later in the canton of Zürich. The cotton industry gave birth to the machine-fabricating industry, and both soon started exporting. By 1810 one-fourth of the thread needed by the cotton industry was being supplied from domestic sources, and shortly thereafter Switzerland became wholly independent of foreign supply. Although craftsmen of the cottage industry resisted mechanization—sometimes violently—machine production was also introduced for weaving cloth.

The pattern of Switzerland’s future economic life was taking shape. Swiss industry had to export in order to grow. It was dependent on inexpensive labour and cheap raw materials, both of which the country lacked and needed to import. Free trade was therefore a necessity. The dangers of foreign protectionism were met by increasing specialization, scientific and technical progress, and more-intensive occupational training rather than by retaliatory tariffs. Swiss companies also began opening plants in other countries.

The liberal triumph

On the political level the half century spanning from 1798 to 1848 can be considered a lasting crisis of transition. The Mediation Act had disappeared with Napoleon’s demise, its place taken by the Federal Pact, which once again established Switzerland as a confederation of sovereign states united only for common defense and the maintenance of internal order. Thus, the formulation and execution of a united foreign policy was still impossible. In addition, the Swiss were separated by legal barriers—each canton had its own laws, currency, postal service, system of weights and measures, and army. The right to reside freely in any canton had also ended along with the Mediation Act, and the inhabitants of each canton therefore regarded those of the other cantons as nationals of different countries. Furthermore, civil liberties were almost nonexistent, and religious differences reappeared, as the Roman Catholic hierarchy abandoned some of its earlier positions and sided firmly with reactionary antimodernism.

But the July Revolution of 1830 in Paris inspired the so-called “Regeneration” reform movements, which organized popular assemblies in the industrialized countryside, even as the cantonal capitals, along with their guilds and patricians, remained conservative. Petitions for liberal constitutions were signed, and in most cantons the patricians renounced power in favour of popular sovereignty and equality for the rural population. Yet, Basel and—for a short time—Schwyz were split into two half cantons because their elites tried to withhold these rights from the entire population, even at the price of civil war. Thus, a group of strong liberal cantons, led by Bern, Zürich, and Lucerne, opposed an alliance of conservative cantons that included the Catholic forest cantons, along with Protestant Basel and Neuchâtel. On a national level, this polarization made it impossible to replace the Federal Pact of 1815 with a liberal constitution drawn up in 1832.

Both conservative and liberal legal and revolutionary changes occurred in the cantons during the 1830s. When the radical wing of the liberals suppressed convents in Aargau in 1841, Lucerne turned conservative and invited the Jesuits to its schools. The radicals responded by launching two unsuccessful guerrilla attacks against Lucerne. Thus, the political conflict was infused with confessionalism, and in 1845 the Catholic cantons formed the separatist defensive league known as the Sonderbund, comprising Lucerne, Uri, Schwyz, Unterwalden, Zug, Fribourg, and Valais. Still, two other Catholic cantons, Solothurn and Ticino, along with several religiously mixed ones, sided with the majority and thus proved that the conflict was essentially political and not religious. In July 1847 the Diet, representing the majority of liberal cantons, declared the Sonderbund to be incompatible with the Federal Pact and demanded its dissolution. A 25-day civil war erupted, and the result was a complete victory for the forces of the confederation. Owing to the military superiority and moderation of the majority and their commander in chief, General Guillaume-Henri Dufour, few lives were lost. Nevertheless, the vanquished bitterly resented their humiliation, and, on a national level, political Catholicism retired into an oppositional “ghetto” until the end of the century. It was protected by the sovereignty of the conservative cantons, where Roman Catholics remained in power and fervently defended local autonomy and ecclesiastical rights against liberal-radical nationalism and centralism.

Immediately after their victory and while the suspicious conservative regimes in the neighbouring countries were embroiled in domestic revolutions, the Swiss liberals established the new federal constitution of 1848, the essential structure of which has remained unchanged. The constitution provided considerable national representation even for the small cantons, which maintained essential sovereign rights (taxation, jurisdiction, and education). It created a bicameral legislative system, modeled after that of the United States, which combined a council of cantons (Ständerat), with each canton entitled to two members, and the National Council (Nationalrat), whose members would be elected in equal proportion to the Swiss population. The constitution also established the Federal Council (Bundesrat), an executive consisting of seven equally entitled secretaries. A common foreign policy was finally possible, and the new federal state unified customs, currency, weights and measures, and the postal service. It also provided for the promotion of the national welfare and for the protection of civil rights and liberties—though these were not granted to Jews until 1866. Finally, in one of the parliament’s first decisions, Bern was chosen for the capital of the new country over Zürich, Switzerland’s largest city.

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The country of Switzerland is in the heart of Europe’s highest mountain range, the Alps. The country is known for its long tradition of staying neutral, or not taking sides, in wars. The capital is Bern.

A key landlocked nation in central Europe, Switzerland is bordered on the north by Germany, on the east by Austria and the tiny principality of Liechtenstein, on the south by Italy, and on the west by France. Its north-south maximum extent is about 140 miles (220 kilometers), while its east-west stretch is roughly 225 miles (360 kilometers). Area 15,940 square miles (41,285 square kilometers). Population (2015 est.) 8,280,000.